DocumentCode :
1382368
Title :
Differential absorption techniques and radiometric satellite calibration for measuring air-sea interactions
Author :
McKeown, Walt
Author_Institution :
Naval Atlantic Meteorol. & Oceangr. Center, Norfolk, VA, USA
Volume :
38
Issue :
5
fYear :
2000
fDate :
9/1/2000 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage :
2213
Lastpage :
2217
Abstract :
The transfer of heat and gas between ocean and atmosphere is a critical parameter for coupled climate models. Surface measurements of these transfers are difficult, expensive, prone to large errors, and based on parameters measured alongside the interface. Although temperature profiles inside the interface itself (topmost millimeter) control air-sea heat flux, measurement of these gradients with fine-wire thermistors is difficult and therefore rare. Recent research has shown that interface temperature profiles can be examined in detail with infrared interferometry by using the frequency variation of water´s absorption in the 3.0-5.0 μm region. Separate theoretical work indicates that sensing a linear interface temperature profile´s vertical thickness may be used for remote sensing of gas flux. Naval Research Laboratory (NRL), Washington, D.C., experiments show that a two-frequency camera technique can map heat flux variations on waves with root mean square error (RMSE) <3.1 W/m2 if a linear interface gradient is assumed. The U.S. Navy is funding the GOES Air-Sea Interaction Project (GASIP) to radiometrically calibrate the multichannel sea surface temperature (MCSST) using accurate surface radiometry. Scatterometer winds will be added to estimate the skin-bulk temperature difference ΔT. Since ΔT correlates closely with heat flux, improved spatial and temporal heat flux inputs will go into coupled Naval models
Keywords :
atmospheric techniques; oceanographic techniques; radiometry; remote sensing; 3 to 5 mum; IR radiometry; SST; air sea interaction; air-sea heat flux; air-sea interaction; differential absorption; infrared interferometry; infrared radiometry; marine atmosphere; measurement technique; meteorology; multichannel sea surface temperature; ocean; radiometric satellite calibration; remote sensing; skin-bulk temperature difference; two-frequency camera technique; Atmosphere; Atmospheric measurements; Electromagnetic wave absorption; Heat transfer; Ocean temperature; Radiometry; Satellite broadcasting; Sea measurements; Sea surface; Temperature sensors;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Geoscience and Remote Sensing, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0196-2892
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/36.868879
Filename :
868879
Link To Document :
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